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PARTNERS
THURSDAY 10TH MARCH 2011
NATION&WORLD
Des Moran saw his brother Lewis and the two Moran sons gunned down
in Melbourne’s gangland war.
He figured it might be his turn after he narrowly survived an assassination
attempt. What he didn’t figure was that it was his brother’s widow
Judy who wanted him dead.
Read John Silvester’s article at The Age.
Gangland granny
calculating killer
Super sized support for fast food changes
DANNY ROSE : AAP
Most Australians want to see the kilojoule content of fast
food listed on menu boards, saying it would influence
their eating choices.
An online poll of almost 2,900 Australian adults
also found super-sized support for hitting junk food
advertisers with a levy that would pay for... Read more
Bank robber busted by urine sample
COPENHAGEN: A Swedish bank robber forgot to cover
his tracks and left three bottles of urine behind after
hiding inside a bank vault in Copenhagen for three days.
The 27-year-old man and his accomplice used the
bottles to relieve themselves after sneaking into the
vault on a Friday in May and remaining there until the
bank opened again the following Monday. Read more
Hundreds clash in Tahrir Square
CAIRO: Attackers armed with knives and machetes on
Wednesday waded into hundreds of pro-democracy
activists in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, witnesses said, as
insecurity raged in post-revolutionary Egypt.
Stone-throwing skirmishes were continuing as an
AFP reporter arrived at the scene, and activists were
gathering sticks and stockpiling rocks to... Read more
KYM AGIUS : AAP
TORRENTIAL rain is continuing to
pound cyclone-ravaged north
Queensland.
The massive rain band began soaking
Cardwell, Mission Beach and Tully on
Monday and it won’t leave until Saturday,
the Bureau of Meteorology said.
An upper level trough will possibly move
into the area on Thursday and work with
the rain band to worsen rainfalls and
increase the risk of flash... Read more
Brother recalls Darcey’s last moments
MOMENTS before her father threw
her over the West Gate Bridge, Darcey
Freeman played games with her older
brother Ben in the back seat of a four-
wheel-drive, as their toddler brother sat
strapped in a child seat between them.
Darcey was pulling faces and making shapes with her hands while
Ben tapped his knees like a drummer. They were on their way to
what was to be Darcey’s first day at school.
Read the full report at The Age.
DANNY KEMP AND SAMER AL-ATRUSH : AFP
AT LEAST 400 people have died and 2,000
been wounded in eastern Libya since the
uprising broke out against Muammar
Gaddafi, medics told reporters in the rebels’
Benghazi base.
“There have been 400 dead since the
beginning in Derna, Baida, Brega, Benghazi,
Ras Lanuf and Bin Jawad,” Salah Jabar, a
medical coordinator for cities held by the
rebels in the east, told reporters.
“We counted the people who... Read more
Qantas workers launch pay fight
THEY are the smiling face of Australia’s
biggest airline - baring the brunt of
passengers’ fury if a flight is cancelled or
delayed.
But Qantas check-in staff at Sydney Airport
have had enough.
The 800 workers and their 600 colleagues in Melbourne are preparing
to walk off the job in protest over the airline’s refusal to grant them a 15
per cent pay rise over three years.
Read Paul Bibby’s full report at smh.com.au.
Rebels retreat in chaos to Libyan oil town
More floods likely in cyclone-hit towns
INSIDE TODAY
Any insider information?
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